The Voynich Manuscript, a 361- year-old volume whose text has so far defied all attempts at translation. / Friedman collection

by Ruth Brown, Newser

by Ruth Brown, Newser

Many people believe that the Voynich manuscript-a book found in 1912 written in an unknown language with images of plants and astronomy-is a hoax. Cryptographers, mathematicians, and linguists have been trying to decipher the supposedly 15th-century text found by book dealer Wilfrid Voynich in 1912 for 100 years, with many deducing it's just a nonsense language fabricated by Voynich himself.

But a new study has found the words may hold a real message after all, the BBC reports.

"It's not easy to dismiss the manuscript as simple nonsensical gibberish, as it shows a significant [linguistic] structure," says study author Marcelo Montemurro, a theoretical physicist at the University of Manchester.

Montemurro used computers to analyze the text, finding the semantic patterns were similar to known languages, but in a way he says Voynich couldn't have known about in 1912 to make the language look "real."

But although they have found the pattern, what the words actually say remains a mystery. "There must be a story behind it, which we may never know," he says.

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